Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 4, 1903, Page 15

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

1CA'S DEBT T0 MOTHER Cocomal Dvostion Macqraied Ancnis of Sogen MO UNCONP PG TOW nt Wama " - ~ed tom aved [ W Ameries .. e ho ! hig . Mee farw o tome (a0 ha Mo powng 4t o0 BAWIN . Novtow's e, Aol oihey ey Wenting [ T | frawe (M pleturs of hat " ) Bon mether el sevirnl i) o gt gl whe bt 99 5 B Rt heantifel cheetnnl halr S sl of har sweet, aninin o e had ange AL the Prankiin onveniion sha sang § Pl o £ wie wrie mino . ing » the o4 Nomenicad .l plane, father and hia brother Marrien T, brather Allow, Wit B 1enor volem oot oA e o . puleen | w rimmed A0 her AOREn (Ma woman's desires. Nhe went tand and to e hand and of & Poland tripn were wther farmers’ —— » Wher's - ning 0 ol tul) . hear Jenny Lawis Kow wod ™ s the e Whien fyw wender P e wrot eree e [ _— [ o tmogen Pat fon e fourth. Wilhe! § patriet Pole's dang Bayard Taylor No of 1T months and ot e - e o in Poctry, perhaps not abeolutely bt the fealing whe oman of enthusiesme, sha wrded themn. Mer sldest daughlor tor Cymbelines 4 after B n. who died at the age hoss name was be. siranger who eame 10 In time, became . eradie, an . prima 4 “ho, ?amwe na b natursl or had endowment come to Itile wished the Beyond, as in the land of art, were resst (n the richer Boston A boarders taken In & rented house w labor toward an uncommon ame I8 (he mother wide, for the Pwore (WA & competiney from an fnvention Por coring apples Iashed by a friend's ros The (hibiren benofited by the good Boston Schosis and all ved some musical tralsing. Omly lttle Lillan, the spolled Garting. rebelled against school diseiplh .t full of whims. However, sho was Sheerving and absorbed knowledge as & Pant does e Ll When she w wre Agam B ted her Here w et wmre goars old four of the were pying & roomy chamber. M wall & long mirror often re- amatenr dressmakers, parading trains, peacock-like. Sometimes other reflactions. The oldest and a-tip-tes before whisthing (he latost air not & particularly pretty but between the ages of 12 and 15 dosomed out wonderfully. The puplle of Lor et beantiful eyes looked Bldch 8 bt festead of M he had fine B a bemntitel complenion and & da Sl wmite. While her features were tot e iy regeiar, (hare was & fascinating Pher shent them Wiketming, & gitl wiih & promising Subis diad ot 1o age of 17. By strictest Sconc oy ome daughier sould be kept in the Eone coatory of Musio, and to Lilllen, then W0 Wilkeimina's vaeant place. The Wk o mmbltione new became definitely et LAiles, and as the gitl's unusual Wha wern demensirated everything was it el ba Bet Puture JA . Y Nell gave War special lessons and P her theenah the five peary’ course In e becmme & Rard stadent, but If this | Fhe Aol of Men Jonnte Benion Fromont, RS A Oemernl FRmen, In Lo An FRIRE Rt weak et 8 e o etran LT T 1w howeh o N Madtae (he preesnt with (he past WA ReRen In (e sarlient astiviiies of (e geont wone Ganarnl Froment wae o Pender & paidofinder, #4 In Ihe spenia Wik ahaped (he Aesting of (he Pacife WL wae b meeertel part Mo Fre Mot AR Wt aeenmpRny her husband in The maely Aupiorntions of (he fonckinns wost BRe renmined w0 her e w80 Lowle whOrR A kept I totel WItH the secret PNl (inen whieh Aomtrofied (enaral Finmmnt o muvenwnin, snd hor keon ineight oA R e wwind grently In fashioning The prailin aehinond AR amamenaie (o Rer father, one blog Fapher rmintan lesnic Bemton had beeome AI1 vurumd i affaire of state. At the Fime (rmalie wan hrening with Mexiow, Jamen Bustmnah, socralaly of state, was I the bk of brineibe correspondence aod puile donwments, weltten in Spatieh, n Bepator Benion's home for (ran The Aandhters knowledge of the I mAde Bt A able assistant, and her fine mind wavn her a perteet understanding of condlttone 10 wan at Ihin time that Liews (enant Framont revatved orders (o legd an Apetition 1o the “frontier beyond (he Miscmaippl The government, wishing to avend (rvible with Magland, insteted (hat the sapedition e condueted as a pescel REAPHISAT onn. Lisntenant Fremont a4 ke (hewe orders, bt the western who had securod the fitting out of wApedition, felt that thelr motives auestioned by (he government and eompeliod 1o et cantiously. How. with Benton's infiuence, they seciired pormission tn gn to the Wocky mountaine, with Mawih Pass, tewny 1o Oregon, an the objeetive point. Those in the secret meant (that 1t should afd emigration into Oregon Among other thin Fremont added a howitzer to his equipment. This eame (o (he notles of the department and | an order was sen’ for Wi retiirn to ex- pinin why a sclentific expedition needed military equipment, Mrs. Fremout had acvompanisd her husband to St. Louls to prepare for his depariure. Here she had remained to open his mall and forward wiuch as comeerned him while he pushed on to Kanss City, where there was plenty of oo gram When the latter came from Washington Mre. Fremont that the order would possibly defeat carefully lald plans. It must not reach Fremont, so she tycked it away in her work basket, sent for¥one- of her husband’'s trusted men and asked him how soon he could start with a message for Fremont. At onee,” was the reply. Ste sent him by the most direct route, and the letter he carried told Lieutenant Fromont only (hat there was need of hurry; that he should start at onve. Tt was not = man he #ro wetr avor Prof. Charles 8. Slichter of the United Htates geological survey, in a monograph entitled, “The Motion of Underground Wators,” says the amount of water beneath the erust of the earth s enormous, amount- ing to 666,000,000 cubic yards. His estimate is based upon the supposi- tion that the average depth which waters can penetrate beneath the surface fs six miles below the land and five miles below the ocean floor. This vast aceumulation, It piaced upon the earth, would co its en- tire sirface to a uniform depth of from 2,000 to 8,000 feet. Under the influence of gravitation the water is geverally in mo- flon and the object of Prof. Slichter's paper I8 to deseribe the rate and manner of its overflow and the laws governing the same. Baperiments have shown that not only do sinds and gravels possess porosity, but rocks presumably solMd and compact may be (raversed by water. (Even so bard a rock #s Montello granite; selected for the sareophagus of the tomb ‘of General Grant on secount of its great strength, shows a poredity of 0.23 per cent. The most pro- ductive water bearing rocks, however, are found to be the porous sandstones and in #ofne cases limestones whose inner texture bas been chemically dissolved. The popular (e of underground waters is derived from the rivers of coplous discharge found in thie Mammoth and other caves. But this fdea I8 erroneous, as such streams, though of grest loeal importance, are compara- tively mare. The great mass of ground ter slowly percolates through sand and gravel deposits, sandstones and other po- rous material under a wide extent of terri- tory. Though its motlon carries it but a fraction of a mile in a year, this ground mter I8 8o widespread and often so ac- cessible a8 to be of the greatest economio tmportanee. The rate of movement of the underflow has beets the subject of long and careful in- vestigation. To determine this interesting question measursments have been made in Nave béen obtained. Onme of the most ac- THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: 'End of a Notable Career| SUNDAY, JANUARY 4, 1903 — Stories of the Life of Mrs Jesse Benton Fremont. WhEll slghieen monthe later that Lieutenant some account in some of her various writ- Fromont learned (he renson of the vague bt imperative commands of his wite, and by (hat time he had nccidentally turned it Caifornia and returned with reports (hat electrified the country and led to i INird expedition Just in time to prevent Californin‘s falling Into the hands of the ritieh Duting their residence in 8t. Louls the Fromonts lived in state at the old Brant home on Chowtsan avenue, which is now being torn down, and It was here that Genets) Fremont made his headquarters during the war. 1t was at this house also that Prince Napoleon retnrned the officlal eall of tha general on the occasion of his vislt 16 this city. In the heydey of her husband’'s fame Mry, Fremont was the cen- ter of a little court of 8t. Louls soclety over which she queened it with all the tilllaney and grace which was hers naturallly Mrs. Fremont, after her ro- moval from St. Louls, made a rumber of visits to the scones of her early girlhood and Iater successes In the soclety of the eity during her married life, and always entertained a tender recollection of the ¢ity where her father had made his home for so many years, “My cousin, Mre. Jessle Benton Fre- mont,” said Mrs. Cable, quoted by the St. Louls Globe-Democrat, “was a woman of greatost personal charm and brilllancy. Well educated, beautiful and of strong, al- most masculine mind, she was at the same time n woman of the greatest vivacity and & charming conversationalist. She was possessed of the broadest Information and reading and of a decided literary oent, and had Inherited much of the fire of genius of her brillant father, Senator Benton, with whom she would hold long conversations on topice of interest to him. Her powers of mind fited her to lead armies or to shine as the leader of a brilllant salon, and her observations, as expressed in her corro- spondence from Washington, were most in- teresting and keen. She was a woman of in- domitable rourage and spirit and intensely devoted to her husband, defending him on all occhsions from the attacks of his enemies with her pen and influence. Her loyelty to General Fremont did mot cease with his death, for she ever held his memory sacred and was jealous of his fame. ‘It was once sald of her by someone who ‘was not friendly to her husband, when he was in the senate, that his wife wrote his speeches and he spoke them. Of course this was not lterally true, but I have no doubt that Mrs. Fremont was of the greatest help to her husband in his public career. Gen- oral Fremont was a man of a certain tim- 1dity and shyness, while his wife was more masterful and forceful in her nature. Of her life in St. Louis I can only speak by family tradition, but T know that in the in- tervals of her school days she spent many happy days here, of which she has given curate and interesting of these is a serles of experiments conducted by Prof. Slichter along the valley of the Arkansas river in western Arkansas. The method is an elec- trical one. A double row of inch and a quarter driven wells 1s sunk across the channel of the river whose underflow is to be tested. The upstream wells are then charged with a strong electrolyte which dissolves and passes down the stream with the moving water. The passage of the electrolyte toward the lower well is shown by the gradual movement of the needle of an electrical instrument and the final ar- rival at the well is shown by a sudden and strong deflection of the needle. it is exceedingly interesting to watch the gradual movement of the water which can be traced from the beginning of the experi- rient in this indirect way. By this method the rate of flow ten feet below the bed of the Arkansas river was found to be two and a balf per day. Other experiments in the Reds of the Hondo and San Gabriel rivers in southern California gave rates of 8%, 4, 5% and 7 feet per day. The knowledge of the underflow that ex- ists beneath the gravel of all river valleys has been taken advantage of In arid sec- tions of the west, where the running dry of streams deprives irrigators of their water supply. By excavating to bed rock in river gravels and building an impervious barrier across the channel these underground waters are saved in sufficient quantities to be of great value to the farmer. A notable subsurface dam of this kind has been con- structed on the Pacoima creek, Cal., to fur- nish water for irrigation and domestic use. Deep zones of flow are a most important feature of the movements of underground ‘waters and open up an interesting fleld for investigation. The wonderful artesian basin of North and South Dakots, which has proved such an important factor In the economic development of these states, forms one of the illustrations used by Prof. ichter in the explanation of doep-seated underflows. A cross section of this part of the country clearly shows the interesting fact that the water which comes to the sur- Underground Waters | B ever her interest flagged her mother shamed her. Mre. Norton learmed her daughter's parts and taught them te her, and worked and cconomized to pay Ber way. The mother had her first reward whem, at grad- wation, Lilllan w ecrowned the greatest singer who ever came out of the conserva- tory. The Castilios gave Ber her gradu- a@ dress, » brocade in blues. costing §76. A ehureh position was quickly Bers. She was called to be soloist at St. Louls and | Faltimore concerts but was unsatisfied. for wiother had taught her to aim higher. B iriking While the from Was Hot. Titjens gave the girl an order admit- ting her to her dressing room that even- fug, and there Lillian met Maretzek. They advised New York. Mrs. Norton believed in striking while tened with her youngest to the metrepols. where two yoars were spent under Maset- When money got scarce Maretaek took the river gravels of streams whose surface flows have ceased and from such measure- ments more or less trustworthy results ek stant companion up to the time of her death In London, November, 1892. Mrs. Norton's increasing feebleness had unfitted her to accompany her daughter on her en- gagements, and it was impossible for the a ly loved and loving daughter to be with her mother when she left to join the “choir fnvisible. FRANCES GROFF. PRATTLE OF THE YOUNGSTERS, Father—What did T tell you I was goin to do to you if I caught you smoking agal Jobnate—If you don’t remember It, p you needn’t think I'm going to tell you! Little Jack—Uncle Bob, does hair grow on your face because you shave? Uncle Bob (who is quite bald)—Yes. Little Jack—Then wiy don't you shave your head? Tommie—I had to be put to bed after our Christmas dinner. Johnnie—Hub! That ain't nothing. te Bave three doctors after ours I had Mother—Now, Elsie, you must be obedi- and I'll find a way to make you so. Elsie—1 know a good way, mamma. Mother—Indeed! And what is it? Biste—Don't ask me to do anything that 1 don't at to. “Aunt Mary,” wisk y eaid G5-year-old Flosslie, would promise me sometbing what Is it, dear?" asked her aunt Fromise me,” continued the little miss, | “sbat whean I grow up you will lend me one of your dresses until 1 can have mine let Jo “I was coming along New Jersey avenue the other day,” sald Senator Dubois, quoted by the York World, “and | saw two Mitle boys playing horse, as I thought. One Boy was in & small cart and the other boy was drawing bim. Tralling along bebind the cart came & most disconsolate louking L Mtle girh, & sister of one of the lttle |8 When she joined her husband fornia, Mra in Cali- Fremont, accustomed to every luxury and refinemeat of soclety, had a taste of the roughtest ploneering. De- tained for nearly two months in Panama, she suffered from the deadly climaie, and San Francisco’'s winds added a cough to the weakness of lungs which was the result of the Panama iliness, and Mrs. Fremont was taken to Monterey for softer air. Meanwhile Licutenant Fremont was cast- ing about for a home for his young wife and family. He placed $3,000—~his all—in the hands of a trusted friend to buy a place in San Jose, while he was off on a government expedition. He returned to find the friend had bought the San Jose place for himeelf, and invested Fremont's money in land tn Mariposa county. Into this wild country the little family was forced to go. The land proved to be rich in mineral wealth and from poverty they were raised in a few years to a position of wealth, and they returned to New York, where by un- fortunate investments the money was lost. Many beautiful treasurers are enshrined in the Fremont coitage in Los Angeles, among them a collection of authentic Bonaparte souvenirs, which was bequeathed to General and Mrs. Fremont by their old triend the Count de la Garde, who made his collection in Paris from the days of the first consulate. The souvenirs are portraita at different epochs in the lite of Josephine and Napoleon, and others, with also many valuable autographic letters. There are also mementos of the general, the sword and belt presented to him at Charlestown on his return from his Cali- fornia achievements of 1846. Other treas- ures are here, which have ever been prec- ious to Mrs. Fremont in this, the latter part of her life in California. Mrs. Fremont was a writer of note; her books have been “The Story of the Guard,” “A Year of American Travel,” “Fair West —Sketches,” “Souvenirs of My Time,"” “Sketch of Senator Benton” and “Will and the Way Stories.” The injury which made her lame during her last three years was due to a character- fstic bit of tmprudence. She felt so lively one day in her 76th year tbat to demon- etrate to some young girls how light she still was on her feet, she began to dance around the room on a waxed floor. She failed to reckon with the rugs and, stepping on one of these, she was thrown violently and dislocated her hip joint. This forced her to live in a wheel chair, but it did not fmpalr her mental keenness. All visitors of prominence to Los Angeles were sure to call upon Mrs, Fremont. There she re- cetved callers with the dignity of a queen, and hundreds doubtless recall her fine face with the brilliant eyes that age and sorrow could not dim. Instructive Results of an Official Investigation. face in the gushing wells of the Dakotas travels underground ail the way from the Black Hills and Rocky mountain slopes, in the water-bearing strata known the Da- kota sandstones. Another illustration of extensive basine due to deep underground flows is found in Wisconsin, where an extensive area of water-bearing rocks, nearly 1,000 feet thick, conducts water of singular purity under large areas of the state. It must be borne in mind that there is & limit to the amount of water which can be drawn from an artesian basin, and that there is no such thing as an inexhaustible underground supply. The gradual failure of the wells which supply the city of Den- ver clearly illustrates this fact. So great a demand was made upon this basin be- tween the years 1884 and 1890 that it has been estimated that if all the wells were now plugged the water-bearing strata of the basin would require forty years to re- cover the eaturated conditions which ex- isted when the first well was sunk. In the eastern part of the country the value and extent of underground waters are ustrated by the enormous quantity used in the city of Savannah, Ga. In 1888 the entire supply of the city was drawn from wells ylelding 5,850,000 gallons a day, a total for the y of 2,135,843,000 gallons, In the couree of time this supply some- what diminished and it was suspected that the flow was obstructed in its entrance to the wells. The plpes were accordingly flushed by forcing into them water under high pressure, and the flow was markedly improved. The study of underground water in its relation to the effective water supply of the covntry Is one of the most important de- partments of the work of the United States geological survey. It s carried on in the arid regions;, where water for irrigation is of the greatest value; in the middle west, where grazing and successful farming largely depend upon it, and in the east, where an unpolluted supply for domestic and municipal use is yearly becoming a more serious problem. boys. I stopped the boys, whom I knew, and sald to one of them ‘Tommy, what are you playlng? “‘We're playing automobile,’ Tommy. “*“Well,’ T asked, ‘why don’t you let sis- ter play, too?" “‘She s playin the gasoline smell.’ " replied sald Tommy. ‘She's The tmp's little sister had upset the fnk- stand on her father's desk and was in dread of punishment eo when asked who had done the deed she replied: “‘Brother,” and, an fter thought, “You'd better not say anything to him about it, though, because he might tell a lie." RELIGIOUS, Cardinal Gibbons will celebrate his silver jubllee as archbishop of Baltimore on Oc- tober 3 next The government of Persia has recently stopped all importation of scriptures in the Persian language. Rev. G. W. Smith of Culver, Ind., has discarded the ministerial garb for the uni- form of a policeman. Rev. Molse Emard of Bell River. Canad: & French Canadian, has been elected mode! ator of the Presbyterian church The Chinese emperor, in his capacity of high priest, offers forty-six sacrifices to different gods in the course of & year. Rumor in England points to Rev. R. J Campbell as the successor to the late Dr. Joseph Parker as pastor of the City temple. W. H. Moore, the New York millionaire, has arranged to build a church at Richford, N. Y., for the use of his great-grandfather’s parish ing gives Pope Leo XIII more ure than a visit from some one lving native village of Carpineto. everybody there personally. According 1o a recent census of chur atterdance in New York City, there is a larger attendance in the smaller cturches, in proportion to the membership, than in the large ones. e parish of the Epiphany, Washington, \ Fn"hia He knows Just celebrated its parish was organized in 182 and has roved & most Influential one. Its rectors wve all heen men marked abllity. c“mh rty is all pald for and is valued over tire October product. secured the Curtains at 25 per cent less than regular. MONDAY MORNING, large stock of Curtains, Port es and Draperies of every description. ORCHARD & WILHELM —~——$15000 PURCHASE OF ——— LACE CURTAINS ARLY in the fall we made arrangements with one of the largest manwfacturers of Net and Swiss Curtains, to tuke his en- This is the dull month with the manufacturer as it is between fall and spring season with them. The purchase was much more than we expected, nearly & goods are all new, clean, fresh from the loom, every pair guaranteed perfect, no raw edges. January 5th, at §:30 o'clock we plack on sale the largest shipment of Ruffled Curtains ever received by any merchant west of the Mississippi river, together with our already Note the prices. We 000. These Swiss Curtains— 125 Ruffed Swiss Cu speclal, pair ...... 160 Ruffled Swiss Cur speclal, pair v 2% Rufed Swiss Curtains— speclal, pair .. 20 Ruffled Swiss Curtaine— eclal, pair o 375 Ruffled 8w speclal, pair Nottingham Curtains 76 Nottingham Curtains— speclal, pair . 100 Nottingham Curtains— speclal, PAIF ........... 160 Nottingham Curtal speéial, palr . 200 Nottingham Curtains— special, pair . %0 Nottingham Curtains. special, pair . 450 Nottingham Curtains— speclal, pair ...... ; .2.50 50 Nottingham Curtains— 3 per yard “ipecial, pair .. 325 Door Portieres— 60 Nottingham ('\lrlif!l’lfl - 5-00 Rope Portieres— ® .1.50 .1.50 2.50 2.50 3.25 e 5.00 Extension Rods— g 5¢ rtains— .75¢c Notice half price. Curtain Swiss— 3 inches yard 125 .1.95 200 qualit wide- special, oo B Stotch goods—special 50, all colors, fringe top £.60 Val 1 ool and bottom-—special, pair ... ‘alance, all colors— special ... $2.50 Long Cu epecial ... $3.50 Valance— spectal ...... $.50 Long Curtain— special ..... $4.50 Long Curtain— special 5 Long Cut $.00 Portieres, all styles— special, pair s rtain— cord or speclal, pair .. $1.50 Portle border. $10.00 Portie border—special, $22.50 Portieres, cord or border—special, palr ....... $85.00 Portieres, cord o) special, pair ” Cretonne— Special 12%c yard up to Remnants— ALF PRICE Extension rods, (brass like cut)—special, each Kverything in our drap- ery department that will not be carried next season, will be reduced to close our stock, regardless of cost. ILess than 20c, 2%c and e per Extension li?)dfi— tenslon rods (like cut), extends 3 to Inches—specia ach Ruffled Net Curtains— $2.50 Net Curtains— epecial . $3.60 Net Curtains— special ... . $4.50 Net Curtains- $6.50 Net Curtain special $10.00 Net Cu specal Brussels, Arab and Irish Point— ..3.75 any style— 6 78 ..8.75 10.00 .12.50 17.50 2250 s $.00 Curtains, any style speclal ... saniiiny $1.50 Curtalns, any style— epecial . $10.00 Curtains, spectal $12.50 Curtains, Epecial $15.00 Curtains, any special $17.50 Curtains, any style— speclal s any style— style— Brussels— $22.60 Saxon; special Seovy $27.50 Saxony Brussels— SPEciAl ivoecsieisesvane White Enamel Extension Rods— White Enamel rods from 50 to b4 Inc special, each .. (like cut), extends o S¢ Vaces—HALF PRICE Xmas Goods at Half Price Upholstering fully furnished. A few choice Vaces, Bronze Busts, Candle We do all kinds of re-upholstering of Furniture; all work done in our own shop. Sticks, marble busts, Clolsenne Estimates cheer- Orchard & Wilhelm Carpet Co. 141416 = 18220 Douglas Street, ©maha. Jected. his insurance. a time prevented from entering the U Some time ago a gentleman applied for an examination the company physician detected a varicocele and Later he became a patient of mine, was entirely cured T afterward took my treatment and we a man is treated for REJECTED, THEN ACCEPTED insurance policy, but upon he was re- and obtained I can show a number of instances where young men were for iited States Navy on this account, who rcepted as sound as a dollar. When Blood Poison, Varicocele, Piles, Rupture, L.ost Manhood or electric belts, lotions and ete, were all found their health and general e W. A. COOK, M. D. specially solicit—patients who have been unsuccessful in their men, and over ten thousand cured patients will gladly testify to m, field of medicine and surges line of diseases. y, T have found myself vastly mc My method of treating Varicocele Is entirely ) ment as the electric light does to the candle. disease. able. It is a duty you owe you broken down in health and prematurely old. of health to consult me. 1 will gladly explain to 1 the true of treatment I will use in restoring you to a healthful state. symptoms which unfit you for business and the ple; Most cases can be treated successfully at home. you to call at my office write me a full and unreserved history of your correspondence will be in plain, sealed envelope, and physicians vited to consult me. COOK MEDICAL CO. 110-112 South 14th Street. (Over Dally N2ws.,) Hours—Sa. m.to8p.m. Sud pdition 1wuch worse than before. expended hundreds of dollars without any permancnt benefit, have lost con- fidencé in their fellow men and despaired of ever being cured. ¥ skill, honesty poor alike receive my very best services, and intsead of scattering wmy thoughts and o proficient by adhering str ainless and devold of danz tages of the radical surgical operation, with none of its many disadvantages. After experimenting It compares with the old-time Reflex Disorders. these are the kind of cures he wants, and the only kind that are worth even the small charge I make for them. tenders and accepting their extravagent claims as faots only to be dec thousands of sufferers from the above conditions have stomachs washes” in a r cepted their condition as incurable, with varlous j finally thrown thelr room or alley, and ac- The gallons of medicines, trusses ,belts, warranted to cure,” but when their stomachs finally revolted, They have These ¢ s I rech fora cuve; men who realize the seriousncss of their condition and will appreciate successful consientious treatment and n permanent cure, For many years I have made a special study of the treatment of CHRONIC AND NERVOUS DISE and s Boih over the whole 10 my own special : it has all the advan- treat- self and family to be cured of this dread I want every man who feels that he is not up to the proper stan ure of you - condition and_deseribe fully the system 3 treatment acts by correcting all defects and the ures of life will be entir Oune personal visit is preferred, but If it ase, plain ving stubborn cases to From actual experience I am in a position to offer you the quickest, safest and most reliable cure obtain- NERVOUS DEBILITY Men many of you in your very prime, when you should be enjoying all the pleasures of life, find yourself ard and permanently removed, stating treat are cordlally in- Omaha, Nebraska , 108 m. to 12:30 p. m. Visiting Dealers We cordially invite you to inspect our fine line of Buggies, Wagons, Manure Spreaders Binder Twine. ’+I*Fl11 LR = B B FRIES & GROTTE. and * : ; 1307-9-11 Jones St. =-I—I—I—H-I1—H—l—l . That Ache in the Bones, Back and Head. 25¢ & Box—Howell Drug Co., 16th and Ca pitol Avenue. ([ E e R R B R HOWELL'S ANTI-GRIP CAPSULES e e SRR o e gtk P ellef or teriary. produch Ulters, Mocous Fatches i mouth, Ha'r or Eyebrows falling o, kiy p ively'and fogever cu LADIES ¥22'ps " s ot TWENTIETH CENTURY FARMER

Other pages from this issue: